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...Cambridge dedicated ten tons of granite to the maintenance of a myth. The Washington Monument in the Common near Agassiz crowns a century's debate over the Washington Elm legend. It was under this Elm that George Washington supposedly took command of the Continental Army in 1773. This account, however, holds up little better than the Elm itself which rotted away thirty years...

Author: By John S. Weltner, | Title: Monument to a Myth | 3/3/1954 | See Source »

...monument shows Washington on horseback with sword in hand, facing the ranks of the Continental Army. Here under the Elm, he legend asserts, he declared himself Commander-in-Chief. This is borne out by a diary describing that historical day. "Discovered" just in time for Cambridge's centennial, the diary depicts the whole episode, minus a few frills. But historians have since proved this account a forgery, written to document the celebration. Actual accounts paint a different picture of the day. The Continental troops, sick and ragged, were entrenched at the other end of Cambridge, unable to march. Washington himself...

Author: By John S. Weltner, | Title: Monument to a Myth | 3/3/1954 | See Source »

...community that has reared the "Spreading Chestnut Tree," Election Oak, Whitefield Elm and Rebellion Tree would not let the Washington Elm go to the dogs. As it grew old, Cambridge doctored the tree with tar and splints. In 1874, one resident wrote, "its crippled branches swathed in bandages, its scars where, after holding aloft for a century their outstretched arms, limb after limb has fallen nerveless and decayed." The molting season was on, and lasted until 1923, when a workman, while removing a dead branch, pulled down the Elm with...

Author: By John S. Weltner, | Title: Monument to a Myth | 3/3/1954 | See Source »

Souvenir hunters plagued the tree until the Cambridge government confiscated the remains. Hoping to make the Elm myth "an object lesson in patriotism for the whole country," officials sent fragments to each of the forty-eight governors, a polished cross-section to Mount Vernon, and thirty-two inscribed blocks abroad. They also presented two gavels of Washington Elm to each state legislature. All that remained to mark the tree site was a bronze disk, resembling a manhole cover, in the middle of Garden street...

Author: By John S. Weltner, | Title: Monument to a Myth | 3/3/1954 | See Source »

...riot broke out after two nearby high schools were dismissed Friday afternoon when someone threw a snowball and used the window of a fish truck on dormitory-lined Elm St., the scene of Yale's 1952 "ice cream" disturbance...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yale Pups Isolated from Girls in Riot Aftermath | 1/20/1954 | See Source »

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